Zeppelins are pie-in-the-sky sort of dreams and every year or so there's a new concept for one, but they never seem to get built. Ever since the great Hindenburg disaster, people are wary of the concept altogether, not to mention, they're incredibly expensive. <a href="http://www.aeromodeller2.be/" target="_blank">Lieven Standaert</a>, a Belgian engineer, is hard at work designing a zeppelin that dispels all the major design issues of airships. He's proposing to build a long and pointy airship called the Aeromodeller II, made out of low-cost materials that generates its own hydrogren via wind power and never needs to land. If his theories prove correct, he could revolutionize <a href="https://inhabitat.com/awesome-aeolus-airship-by-christopher-ottersbach/" target="_blank">airship designs</a> and propel <a href="https://inhabitat.com/first-public-hydrogen-station-unveiled-in-the-netherlands/" target="_blank">hydrogen power</a> into the future for zero emissions transportation.

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Aeromodeller II

Current designs for airships have numerous problems, including that they rely on helium, they're expensive to build, are vulnerable due to their over-pressured skins and require expensive hangars to park them in.

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Aeromodeller II

Standaert's design for the Aeromodeller II would eliminate many of these problems and offer up a pleasant mode of transportation.

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Aeromodeller II

The zeppelin's shape is modified to be longer and skinnier to reduce the need for pressurized skins.

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Aeromodeller II

Lower cost materials, like light thermoplastic foil could be used instead of a woven skin material.

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Aeromodeller II

The Aeromodeller II is also designed so it never needs to land, which eliminates the need for expensive hangars.

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Aeromodeller II

The zeppelin would move via hydrogen, which would be generated on board, so it never needs to stop at a refueling station.

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Aeromodeller II

Using ground anchors, the airship's propellers would switch gears to become turbines, harnessing the power of the wind to generate hydrogen.

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Aeromodeller II

In this way, the zeppelin could remain aloft indefinitely by resupplying hydrogen whenever it needs to.

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Aeromodeller II

More like a sail boat than a power boat, the Aeromodeller II isn't designed for speed and would probably only achieve about 80 km/h (50mph). This low speed transportation though would be completely zero-emissions and rely completely on renewable energy.

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Aeromodeller II

Standaert is currently showing a model of his design in Antwerp, Belgium, until the end of February.

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Aeromodeller II

Zeppelins are pie-in-the-sky sort of dreams and every year or so there's a new concept for one, but they never seem to get built. Ever since the great Hindenburg disaster, people are wary of the concept altogether, not to mention, they're incredibly expensive. Lieven Standaert, a Belgian engineer, is hard at work designing a zeppelin that dispels all the major design issues of airships. He's proposing to build a long and pointy airship called the Aeromodeller II, made out of low-cost materials that generates its own hydrogren via wind power and never needs to land. If his theories prove correct, he could revolutionize airship designs and propel hydrogen power into the future for zero emissions transportation.